Currently reading: BMW to cease production of the i3 Range Extender

The i3 REx is forced into extinction in Europe due to the longer range possible from the latest pure-electric variant of BMW's hatchback

The BMW i3 is now an electric-only model in Europe, as the range extender versions have been deleted from the line-up.

The range extender, which uses a two-cylinder 650cc petrol engine to provide additional charge to the drive battery, has effectively been made redundant by the improved, longer-range pure-electric version of the i3 unveiled at this week's Paris motor show.

The i3’s battery has been boosted to 42.2kWh from 33kWh provide 193 miles of range under new WLTP cycle. That's 34 miles more than the older version could manage and is sufficient, according to BMW, to negate the need for the range extender version, which offered a claimed driving range of 231 miles under the outgoing, less-accurate NEDC test. 

In a statement, BMW said: “The Range Extender i3 will cease production and we will only sell the pure-electric version going forward. With the gains in pure-electric range, together with the increasing availability of rapid charging facilities we believe the customer demand is shifting to an pure-electric model.”

The move takes the i3 model range down from four variants to two, namely the standard i3 and hotter i3s. The latter produces an additional 13bhp and 15lb ft from its electric motor, with 181bhp and 199lb ft contributing to a 0-62mph time of 6.9sec.

The range extender version of the i3 formerly made up 60% of sales, despite a £3150 premium over the standard car. 

The Range Extender i3 will still be available in North America and Japan, where demand remains higher than Europe and the rest of the world. 

Read more: 

Updated BMW i3 gets longer range

2016 BMW i3 94Ah Range Extender review

BMW i3 facelift launched with 181bhp i3s range-topper

Top 10 best electric hatchbacks 2018

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emmarewal 12 February 2024

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Jenniferglowes 12 June 2020

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Really nice and interesting post. I was looking for this kind of information and enjoyed reading this one.

 

 

 

 

 

dfl3tch3r 29 September 2019

REx

I don’t understand why the REx engine would fail due to low usage? I thought it kicked in for a short while once every 6 weeks / maintenance cycle? Most bikes are used to low use and often only on the road for 6 months of the year.

I am really considering buying an i3 REx and would like to know if I would be able to manually start the engine every other day for a few minutes?

Also I would like to know if at some future point I would be able to completely remove the REx and have the car re-documented as a pure EV? For if and when things like ULEZ and VED change?